A suppression signal representing the periodic variation of a digital signal is separated into separation signals containing values of equal phase. The separations signals are subjected to high frequency attenuating filtering before being recomposed into a corrected suppression signal which is used for correcting the digital signal.
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1. Method of suppressing periodic variations in a digital signal comprising the steps of
filtering said digital signal to obtain a suppression signal representing the periodic variation of said digital signal,
separating said suppression signal into T separation signals, each of these T separation signals containing values of said suppression signal having equal phase in said suppression signal,
applying high frequency attenuating filtering to each of said separation signals to obtain filtered separation signals,
reconstructing a corrected suppression signal from said filtered separation signals,
correcting said digital signal by means of said corrected suppression signal.
2. Method according to
3. Method according to
4. Method according to
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This patent application claims the benefit of U.S. Provisional Patent Application No. 60/576,261, filed Jun. 2, 2004, which is incorporated by reference. In addition, this application claims the benefit of European Application No. 04102185.8 filed May 18, 2004, which is also incorporated by reference.
The present invention relates to a method of suppressing periodic variations in a digital signal.
Such a method is for example applicable to a digital signal representation of an image when said digital signal representation comprises periodic variations which create artifacts in the hard copy or soft copy image.
Robust estimation of periodic artifacts is extremely difficult. A lot of research has been done to construct filters which only remove the periodic artifacts.
Most of these filters are not accurate at regions with high intensity gradients (edges). In these areas, most filters generate high responses.
The present invention specifically relates to an application in which an image signal is obtained by reading a radiation image that has been temporarily stored in a photo-stimulable phosphor screen. A digital signal representation of the stored radiation image is obtained by scanning the plate with stimulating radiation and converting the image wise modulated light which is emitted by the plate upon stimulation into a digital signal representation. The image-wise light emitted upon stimulation is focussed by means of an array of microlenses onto an array of transducers converting light into an electric signal.
Because an imaging plate such as a photo-stimulable phosphor screen has a varying thickness, several positions of the imaging plate are out of focus with respect to the microlens array.
After calibration of the received signal, the areas where the imaging plate was out of focus contain some periodic variation with the same period of the microlens array.
The period of a microlens array is defined as the width of one microlens in the microlens array.
When analyzing the Fourier spectrum of the received signal, peaks are observed in the Fourier spectrum at the frequency F of the microlens array and the harmonics, Fn=nF, n=1,2,3, . . . for a microlens with a width of T=1/F pixels. Many filters can be constructed to suppress periodic variation of this nature. However, they all have to be tuned carefully to ensure the removal of only the periodic variation.
In a similar manner, a filter can be constructed which extracts the periodic variation from the signal. This periodic estimation will contain extra erroneous information.
To overcome the above-mentioned disadvantages the present invention provides a method of suppressing periodic variations in a digital signal as set out in claim 1.
Specific features for preferred embodiments of the invention are set out in the dependent claims.
Applying the method of the present invention makes a designed filter more robust against the above-mentioned drawback and makes the result of applying the filter more periodic.
Further advantages and specific embodiments of the present invention will become apparent from the following description and drawings.
The present invention will be described with reference to digital medical imaging, more specifically with reference to a computed radiography system as described below.
In computed radiography a digital signal representation of a radiographic image is read out of a photo-stimulable phosphor screen that has been exposed to a radiation image.
The digital signal representation is obtained by scanning the exposed photo-stimulable phosphor screen with stimulating radiation and by converting image-wise modulated light which is emitted by the screen upon stimulation into an electric signal representation. The electric signal representation is then digitized.
In such a system for reading a radiation image out of a photo-stimulable phosphor screen an array of microlenses may be used for collecting the image-wise modulated light which is emitted upon stimulation of the screen.
An example of such a read out system integrated in a cassette conveying the photo-stimulable phosphor screen has been described for example in U.S. 2003/0111620 and in U.S. Pat. No. 6,642,535.
Microlenses can for example be obtained from LIMO-Lissotschenko Mikrooptik GmbH, Hauert 7, 44227 Dortmunt, Germany.
Although the invention will be described with reference to a read out system using an array of microlenses, the principal of the invention also works for signals containing periodic variation originated by other features.
Light collected with a microlens array shows a periodic variation with the same period as the microlens elements in the microlens array (
If an emitting light source is placed out of focus (which occurs when due to varying thickness of the photo-stimulable phosphor screen several positions of the screen are out of focus with regard to the microlens array) (
This periodic variation is of a multiplicative nature. If C is the calibrated signal, we define
S=logC
to convert the multiplicative problem to an additive problem.
If Sc is the corrected signal of S after applying the necessary correction steps described in the following sections, the corrected signal is converted using
R=expSc
to obtain the resulting signal R.
Fourier analysis of the calibrated signals S indicates peaks at the frequency F of the microlens and the harmonics (
A digital signal representation of an image is obtained by a computed radiography system as described higher or is retrieved from an archive system in case the image representation was generated earlier. Next, the image representation is applied to a work station or an image processing unit where the artefact suppression method according to the present invention is applied. Next, the corrected image representation is displayed or archived.
From the Fourier analysis of
Sf=ℑ(S)
Pf=WSf (1)
ℑ denotes the Fourier transform. For this particular application, W is defined as
However, the choice of W is not critical and any suitable set of scale parameters may be used.
If it is assumed that Pf is the Fourier transform of the correct period variation, the suppressed signal Sc is obtained from
Sc=ℑ−1(ℑ(S)−Wℑ(S))
Sc=S{circumflex over (×)}ℑ−1(1−W)
ScS−S{circumflex over (×)}ℑ−1(W) (3)
The assumption that ℑ−(Pf) or S{circumflex over (×)}ℑ−1(W) is the correct periodic variations is not entirely correct (see below).
The convolution kernel
K=ℑ−1(W)
is displayed in
When applying the last form of Equation (3), the microlens grid artifact suppression block in
The correction algorithm applied to the signal of
If the method of the present invention would be applied to a real diagnostic signal (
This effect cannot be resolved by careful tuning of the parameters or choosing a different filter.
To solve this problem, a post-processing filter is applied to the response of the high-pass frequency filter P=S{circumflex over (×)}ℑ−1(W) of equation (3).
The post processing filter is designed in such a way that the filter has the same period as the period of the variation to be removed.
If the signal has period T, this maps to separating the signal into T signals where the pixels have a corresponding phase.
∀iε[0,T[:Pi=(pi,pi+T,pi+2T,pi+T, . . . )
where pi is the ith element of the extracted periodic variation P.
For each signal Pi, a high frequency attenuating filter is applied. To filter the vertical stripes originated in a microlens digitizer system, a median filter is chosen of a certain size k. The choice of k is not critical. It needs to be large enough to filter all reoccurring erroneous filter responses and small enough to adapt itself to varying thickness of the emitting imaging plate. A kernel that is too large however, can have significant impact on execution times and may be too robust for changes in thickness of the imaging plate. A suitable size for processing diagnostic images is found to be 7.
Known image processing techniques can be used to compute the median elements at the border of the signal. Extension of the signal at its both ends with a mirrored version of the signal with the size of the filter kernel eliminates the filter edge effect mostly. Dependent on the variance of the input signal, one can think of varying schemes to automatically determine the size of the median kernel or low pass filter to make the filter more robust for varying input signals.
After post-processing of the filter responses Pi, the filtered version of the suppression signal P is reconstructed:
where pi′j is the jth element of Pi′, the post-processed filter response Pi.
and the corrected signal is computed:
S′c=S−Pc
An example of the suppression signals P and median filtered suppression signal Pc for the diagnostic input signal, given in
If the post processing low pass filter is placed between blocks 2 and 3 of the algorithm in
The algorithm of
In case of a digitizing system using microlenses, this maps respectively to a horizontal and vertical convolution.
The post-processing step can also be extended to two dimensions to make the filter even more robust.
If we define
the convolution step in
Having described in detail preferred embodiments of the current invention, it will now be apparent to those skilled in the art that numerous modifications can be made therein without departing from the scope of the invention as defined in the appending claims.
Vuylsteke, Pieter, Behiels, Gert
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